Tag Archives: CBC

I quick reminder of the SuperMoon lunar eclipse this Sunday. The next time that a lunar eclipse coincides with the Moon’s closest approach will be 2033. So recharge your camera and get your tripod out of the closet to record the event.

CBC News has provided the viewing times for different parts of Canada.

The telescope optical design is a folded Ritchey-Chrétien. Both the primary and secondary mirrors are hyperboloidal, and together they form a well-corrected focus. The tertiary mirror is used to fold and steer the light path so that the science beam can be delivered to any of eight instruments that will be mounted on the two main Nasmyth platfoms. The image is formed 20 meters from the center of the tertiary mirror. The focal ratio of the telescope is f/15.

The field of view of the telescope is 15 arc minutes (fully illuminated), or 20 arc minutes with slight vignetting at the edges of the field. At f/15, the focal length of TMT is 450 meters (1476 feet)! This means that the 20 arc minute field of view measures 2.618 meters (8.6 feet) in diameter.

The primary mirror focal ratio is f/1. This short focal ratio was chosen to make the telescope compact, which helps to keep the telescope structure and the enclosure affordable. As the name implies, the primary mirror is 30 meters (98 feet) in diameter, and because it is f/1 it has a focal length of 30 meters.

Current king of the largest light-bucket is the 10.4m diameter Gran Telescopio Canarias. Therefore the 30m TMT and the 39m E-ELT will be a considerable gain in light gathering power over the current crop of telescopes. Some are predicting that scientists will be able to directly observe planets orbiting distance stars, and perhaps even see distant oceans and weather formations.

It’s always intrigued me how we spend so much on EQ mounts, when these large telescopes operate in a simpler Alt-Az configuration.

Welcome to a journey into our Universe with Dr Dave, amateur astronomer and astrophotographer for over 40 years. Astro-imaging, image processing, space science, solar astronomy and public outreach are some of the stops in this journey!